Sorry! I meant to say earlier lower right Wasn't thinking straight at the time, sorry.
I asked my friends and alot said upper right, but then alot said lower right, so I've gotten very confused about the whole thing now. They couldn't make up their minds as to where they thought it goes
I guess then that It's the upper right.
Sorry!

A little script to I wrote for an answer to a Genki question.
[yes I know I got "初めまして" and "どうぞよろしく" mixed up. (I wrote this back when I had the flu, so yeah. Also ignore the little doodles...hehe^^)]

It is not good form to hijack a thread to ask an unrelated question. Also you will find you will receive many more responses if you attempt to proof-read (i.e. correct spelling errors, capitalize and punctuate properly) before submitting a message.

Here's a sample of my handwriting. I use a pen, so it can get messy at times. I use a standard college ruled notebook which I write down vertically. I still write pretty slow at about a sentence a minute or two pace. Part of my problem I notice now and again is the proportions on the simpler kanji. I tend to write them smaller, as I usually write them as radicals. Same can be said for my kana I think.

Critique and advice is requested.

Current source of sentences I use for practice is http://www.iknow.co.jp which I mentioned on the learning resource forum.

Looks very, very good. Did you do this from memory, or looking at the kanji? Only issues depends if that's 手 above 父 or 毛, as you curved the bottom stroke the wrong way if it's "hand". Plus 船 has a longer stroke through the center, but that's a minor nit. In addition 戸 's first stroke can be downward similar to how you did 言.

Obviously, I don't know if you did the stroke order correctly. Some will argue that's irrelevant, but practicing it now makes it second nature in the future.

PS: on right hand radicals, the bottom horizontal stroke is usually upward like in 理、野、and 頭. Another minor nit mind you.

I copied this because the original handwriting was too difficult to read without assistance. I did this back in September, I believe.

On a side note, if anybody knows the difference between 妙徳 and 徳, I would be quite interested in hearing what you have to say. Not finding 妙徳 in even 広辞苑, I asked the author and was told, "Well, if you understand 徳, I suppose that's good enough."

Looks very, very good. Did you do this from memory, or looking at the kanji? Only issues depends if that's 手 above 父 or 毛, as you curved the bottom stroke the wrong way if it's "hand". Plus 船 has a longer stroke through the center, but that's a minor nit. In addition 戸 's first stroke can be downward similar to how you did 言.

Obviously, I don't know if you did the stroke order correctly. Some will argue that's irrelevant, but practicing it now makes it second nature in the future.

PS: on right hand radicals, the bottom horizontal stroke is usually upward like in 理、野、and 頭. Another minor nit mind you.

I looked at the kanji for this set.

Yes, that's 毛 above 父. 手 is 1st grade. This list is 2nd grade.

Thanks for the 戸 tip.

I relied on the techniques for writing kanji (go from the top left and work your way down) to write the kanji. I'll probably look at the stroke order diagrams for some kanji, but I usually get stroke order down if I know the radicals.